- Brazilian Olympic Committee
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Brazilian Olympic Committee
Comitê Olímpico Brasileiro
Brazilian Olympic Committee
Comitê Olímpico Brasileiro logoNational Olympic Committee Country Brazil Code BRA Created June 8, 1914 Recognized June 8, 1914 Continental
AssociationPASO Headquarters Rio de Janeiro President Carlos Arthur Nuzman Secretary General Carlos Roberto Osório Website http://www.cob.org.br/ The Brazilian Olympic Committee or BOC (Portuguese: Comitê Olímpico Brasileiro – COB) is the highest authority in Brazilian sport and the governing body of Brazilian Olympic sport. It was officially founded on June 8, 1914 but World War I caused its official activities to begin only in 1935. It was founded at the headquarters of the Brazilian Federation of Rowing Societies (Federação Brasileira das Sociedades de Remo) as an initiative from the Metropolitan League of Athletic Sports (Liga Metropolitana de Esportes Atléticos).
The BOC has multiple sources of income, but its principal means of funding is its 2% share of all the profits from the Brazilian National Lottery and other games of chance. The BOC is presided by Carlos Arthur Nuzman, and its principal project is the 2016 Summer Olympics, to be held in Rio de Janeiro.
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Attributions
The BOC is responsible for enrolling Brazilian athletes in every Olympic Games. The policy used by the institution is the "meritorious inclusion". This means that the BOC does not hold Olympic Trials; all Brazilian athletes that meet the requirements set forth by their sport's International Federation for participation in the Games are automatically enrolled by the BOC in their respective Olympic event — if the country has a limited number of berths in any given event in the Games and the number of athletes meeting the criteria for qualification exceeds it, the BOC will then respect the official rankings of the sport, or any other criterion used by the sport's Federation for ranking purposes, and enroll the top ranked athletes to the limit of berths assigned to the country in the Games. National teams may qualify through pre-Olympic tournaments and/or international events that award berths in the Games; individual athletes, depending on their sport, may also qualify by achieving a certain minimum performance or time for the Games (e.g. in Swimming, where athletes qualify when they swim their event in a certain time).
The BOC has a policy of never requesting "inclusion berths" in the Olympic Games: every country's Olympic Committee is entitled to request that the International Olympic Committee include athletes of that nationality in events to which they had not qualified, so long as the country in question had no athletes qualified when it had a right to enroll athletes in any given event; any national Olympic Committee may also request those berths if it has not reached the number of athletes that it had been assigned, which would cause the Olympic draws to diminish.
As an example, if no Brazilian athletes were to succeed in qualifying for the Olympic Weightlifting event, then no Brazilian athlete will participate in the given Olympics, because the BOC will not request the enrollment of any athlete that has not achieved qualification on his or her own merit. This could be observed, for instance, in the Weightlifting event of the 2004 Summer Games, when no Brazilian athlete participated, even though the BOC could have requested a special inclusion for representation purposes.
The Brazilian Olympic Committee submits official bids for holding an Olympic Games. In Brazil, the BOC is the final authority for submitting a bid, and no Brazilian city may bid if not through the BOC. In recent times, the city of Rio de Janeiro has been the preferred candidate, having had its bid submitted for the Games of 2004 and 2012. Rio de Janeiro was elected to host the 2016 Games on its third bid submission in 2009.
2012 bid
In 2004, when it was time to submit the bids for the Games of 2012 (ultimately awarded to London, England), the city of São Paulo contested the automatic choice of Rio de Janeiro as the natural Brazilian candidate. São Paulo insisted that it could produce a bid that would be more competitive than that of Rio de Janeiro. The BOC would not alter its policy of submitting only one national bid and decided to settle the issue internally, through a vote in which all registered members of the BOC would participate. Both cities were required to present their bid for the Games (as if it were being submitted to the IOC then) for evaluation by the delegates voting. The result was a landslide in favor of Rio de Janeiro, and the BOC then submitted that city's bid for the Games. This caused some confusion in the international community, since the city of São Paulo had announced that it planned to bid for the Games. Many thought that the city's officials had either missed the deadline to submit the bid or had decided to abandon the initiative to bid for the Games on their own.
Confederations
The national Confederations whose sports are part of the Olympic Program are directly linked to the BOC, but the entity also works with many "Associated Confederations", which are those whose sports are not part of the Olympic Program in the present.
Directly linked
- Brazilian Archery Confederation
- Brazilian Associated Fighting Styles Confederation
- Brazilian Athletics Confederation
- Brazilian Aquatic Sports Confederation
- Brazilian Badminton Confederation
- Brazilian Baseball and Softball Confederation †
- Brazilian Basketball Confederation
- Brazilian Boxing Confederation
- Brazilian Canoeing Confederation
- Brazilian Ice Sports Federation
- Brazilian Cycling Confederation
- Brazilian Equestrian Confederation
- Brazilian Fencing Confederation
- Brazilian Football Confederation
- Brazilian Snow Sports Confederation
- Brazilian Grass and Indoor Hockey Confederation
- Brazilian Gymnastics Confederation
- Brazilian Handball Confederation
- Brazilian Judo Confederation
- Brazilian Modern Pentathlon Confederation
- Brazilian Rowing Confederation
- Brazilian Sailing and Motors Sports Confederation
- Brazilian Shooting Confederation
- Brazilian Taekwondo Confederation
- Brazilian Table Tennis Confederation
- Brazilian Tennis Confederation
- Brazilian Triathlon Confederation
- Brazilian Volleyball Confederation
- Brazilian Weightlifting Confederation
† In June 2005, the International Olympic Committee announced that both Baseball and Softball would be excluded from the Olympic Program as of the 2012 Summer Olympic Games, to be held in London, United Kingdom. At this point, no change in status for the Baseball and Softball Confederation has been announced.
Associated
- Brazilian Automobilist Confederation
- Brazilian Bodybuilding Confederation
- Brazilian Bowling Confederation
- Brazilian Capoeira Confederation
- Brazilian Confederation of College Sports
- Brazilian Confederation of Terrestrian Sports
- Brazilian Confederation of Fishing and Subaquatic Sports
- Brazilian Chess Confederation
- Brazilian Futsal Confederation
- Brazilian Golf Confederation
- Brazilian Ice hockey and Figure Skating Confederation
- Brazilian Hunting Confederation
- Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu Confederation
- Brazilian Karate Confederation
- Brazilian Kung-fu and Wushu Confederation
- Brazilian Motorcycle Confederation
- Brazilian Mountain Biking Confederation
- Brazilian Parasailing Association
- Brazilian Parachuting Confederation
- Brazilian Rugby Association
- Brazilian Squash Confederation
- Brazilian Surfing Confederation
- Brazilian Hiking Confederation
- Brazilian Water Skiing Confederation
See also
- Brazil at the Olympics
- Brazilian Paralympic Committee
External links
- Official website (in Portuguese)
- Website for the 2004 Summer Olympic Games (in Portuguese)
Pan American Sports Organization (PASO) Antigua and Barbuda • Argentina • Aruba • Bahamas • Barbados • Belize • Bermuda • Bolivia • Brazil • British Virgin Islands • Canada • Cayman Islands • Chile • Colombia • Costa Rica • Cuba • Dominica • Dominican Republic • Ecuador • El Salvador • Grenada • Guatemala • Guyana • Haiti • Honduras • Jamaica • Mexico • Netherlands Antilles • Nicaragua • Panama • Paraguay • Peru • Puerto Rico • Saint Kitts and Nevis • Saint Lucia • Saint Vincent and the Grenadines • Suriname • Trinidad and Tobago • United States of America • Uruguay • Venezuela • Virgin Islands
Categories:- National Olympic committees
- Brazil at the Olympics
- Sports governing bodies in Brazil
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